I have tried PowerPoint 2016 & found it useless for my needs with so many features removed. I have since reverted to PowerPoint 2011 but now constantly receive a seriously annoying 'nag' update ribbon everytime I open PowerPoint.
Can you please remove this. It is about as useful as that paperclip and annoys me even more because PowerPoint 16 is so bad.

When I need to prepare two version of presentations for viewers, in Traditional and Simplified Chinese, I could not find a function to convert the file directly and easily.
I need to translate each text box one by one every time and it is very time-consuming.

About animation, I would like the words to appear only when the auditors have given the answer. Like there are 7 words to be given, and when that word is mentionned, then I can make it appear. So there is no particular sequence, it will only be depending on the answers. When the 7 words have been found, I can go to the next slide

I would like an easier way to loop a slide. In this use case, I have a slide which, through a complex series of steps, is able to loop the slide. The purpose of the looping slide is to present either images, or text, with animations on a single slide in the deck. The information is presented to conference attendees while they enter a room. Once it is time to start the presentation, a key is pressed to advance to the next slide.

With the new software update released within the last week, text arrows now show up as irrelevant symbols. This is very frustrating, especially as a student. Please fix, this wouldn't have happened with keynote.

In older versions of PowerPoint (at least on PCs) there was an option to display gridlines. Unable to find it on my current Mac version of PowerPoint I visited several support websites. All confirmed that this option no longer exists.

The gridlines were a very USEFUL option. I used them regularly. Why was the decision made to take them away?

Hi.
I work for a large Digital services firm. Many of my customers embeds a Powerpoint file inside an Excel document. Unfortunately, when I try to open the PPT file it won't open, because I've been told Office for Mac currently don't support embedded PPT.